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Only four years ago, Steve Fennelly, Elizabeth Perry and Mark Shandrow created their first sober living, which has now mushroomed into 14 recovery houses around Costa Mesa, California under the umbrella of the Solid Landings Behavioral Group.

It’s safe to say that their doggedness paid off; Solid Landings now offers the full continuum of care, from detox to sober living in their various houses, has close to 100 beds in all, and receives regular referrals from treatment centers across the nation.

And what they provide puts many of the high-end treatment programs to shame—residents can be treated for dual diagnosis, eating disorders, depression, self-harm and sex addiction and receive twice-weekly therapy, EMDR, Reiki and a variety of holistic treatments.

Overhead is low because of the unique skill set each of the partners brings: Fennelly excels at finding high-quality, low cost real estate that they can easily renovate while Perry is a self-diagnosed “bargain hunter extraordinaire.” Still, unlike many in the field, they’re realists. When you get sober, you have to change your approach, your outlook and your perception—everything.” To that end, Solid Landings employs several counselors in their AVEnues program whose sole vocation is to guide residents toward finding theirs: after roughly 30 days, clients are assigned an AVEnues counselor who helps them get either back in school or into the workforce.

“Even though we’re less expensive than many, it’s still expensive,” Perry says. “A lot of addicts come to us having failed out of school, so getting back in can feel insurmountable,” Perry explains.

See full summary » Using Helen Gurley Brown's book as a jump off point, we follow the adventures of a supermarket tabloid editor as he tries to parlay an interview with the author of the book into headlines and sales. In the scene where Bob is throwing darts at a photo of Helen, the camera eventually zooms in on the picture to show not only her face, but also to give a sly bit of foreshadowing.